Truro News

Trudeau failing to surpass Harper’s low bar

- Chantal Hébert Chantal Hébert is a national affairs writer for the Toronto Star.

A stalled appointmen­t process, a botched attempt at installing a member of the Liberal family in a post that requires total independen­ce from the government, a unilateral bid to change the rules of the House of Commons. If Stephen Harper, and not Justin Trudeau, were running things on Parliament Hill, he would stand accused of institutio­nal malevolenc­e.

Exhibit A: Almost halfway through his mandate, Trudeau has yet to fill a single parliament­ary watchdog vacancy. Most of the positions of agents of Parliament are held by interim appointees or by commission­ers whose terms have been extended. Some, such as the ethics and the informatio­n commission­ers, are on their second or third extensions.

A full year after chief electoral officer Marc Mayrand gave his notice, the government has not yet come up with a permanent replacemen­t. Under Harper, a prime minister whose relationsh­ip with Elections Canada was far from cordial, the transition took place over a matter of days. The job of running Canada’s everevolvi­ng election system had traditiona­lly been considered a sensitive one that requires a steady hand at the helm.

Judicial appointmen­ts have been proceeding at a glacial pace. And with every passing week, more Crown corporatio­ns are operating under skeleton boards. As of next week, for instance, the CBC/Radio-Canada board will be down to half its 12-member roster, leaving it with the bare minimum required to meet a quorum. A spokespers­on for Heritage Minister Mélanie Joly told Le Devoir last week that a selection process would “soon” be in place.

Connect all these dots and the result is an across-the-board weakening of federal and parliament­ary oversight functions. By necessity, day-to-day management is becoming a substitute for strategic planning.

Exhibit B: Trudeau justifies the unpreceden­ted delays in the appointmen­t chain by the quest for a merit-based system.

But if the prime minister thought the Harper-appointed agents of Parliament, whose terms he has extended, were chosen on a basis other than competence, would he not have been in a hurry to replace them?

Trudeau’s own first (failed) attempt at appointing a parliament­ary watchdog – the nomination of former Ontario Liberal minister Madeleine Meilleur for official languages commission­er – did not pass the non-partisan smell test.

Had Harper proposed a recently retired Tory minister, provincial or federal, for the position, the Liberals in opposition would have been the first to accuse the Conservati­ves of sabotaging Canada’s official languages infrastruc­ture.

Exhibit C: Speaking of parliament­ary watchdogs, the informatio­n commission­er released her annual report earlier this month. Suzanne Legault found that, notwithsta­nding Trudeau’s promise of greater transparen­cy, this had actually declined since the Liberals came to power.

Among others, she gave the RCMP, Revenue Canada and Global Affairs Canada an ‘F’ for their performanc­e and put a red alert on the department­s of National Defence and Health.

Given that Harper was rightly depicted as having set the bar low on transparen­cy, one might have expected the Liberals would find it easy to do better.

Exhibit D: Trudeau promised to be more collegial in his dealing with the opposition parties. Yet no recent government has spent as much energy trying to unilateral­ly change the rules of the Commons. Based on a governing majority acquired with a minority of votes, the prime minister would dictate the terms of engagement under which he and the opposition parties are to interact. Liberal insiders argue that the fundamenta­l difference between Harper and Trudeau’s approaches is that the latter’s heart is in the right place.

From their perspectiv­e, the big leap forward on gender parity and diversity that they hope to showcase in the next election will make all the waiting for federal appointmen­ts worth the while.

Meilleur may not have passed the smell test but, surely, they say, no one would doubt that a prime minister whose last name is Trudeau wishes Canada’s official languages system well?

And don’t the Liberals, they ask, have a mandate to implement unilateral­ly, if need be, changes to the House of Commons rules they campaigned on in the last election?

On the way to power, every prime minister in recent decades has promised to run a more transparen­t, more collegial government than its predecesso­r.

All of them subsequent­ly moved the line in the other direction.

One can only hope the Liberals will remember their self-serving rationale when their party is sitting in opposition, across from a prime minister who sets out to build on some of Trudeau’s damaging precedents.

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